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Search is Our CRAFTMon, 16 Mar 2015 15:24:45 +0000en-UShourly1http://wordpress.org/?v=3.6Avoid Measuring "Cost Per Link" and Stop Driving SEO Bad Strategy: Infographichttp://www.iacquire.com/blog/avoid-measuring-cost-per-link-and-stop-driving-seo-bad-strategy-infographic?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=avoid-measuring-cost-per-link-and-stop-driving-seo-bad-strategy-infographic
http://www.iacquire.com/blog/avoid-measuring-cost-per-link-and-stop-driving-seo-bad-strategy-infographic#commentsFri, 29 Jun 2012 15:15:56 +0000Joe Griffinhttp://blog.iacquire.com/?p=561]]>In 2003, Google rolled out the Florida update – it was a game changer, and I remember it well. It’s been 9-years, and not much has changed. Google has always been pretty upfront about what its quality requirements are.

Panda and Penguin represent the evolution of that Florida update 9-years ago. Even with the increased visibility into guideline requirements, in-house SEO’s are still pushing, even mandating bad strategy.

The Root of the Problem – Driving Down Cost Per Link

This practice of driving down what I call “cost per link” is where we really need some attention. When I say cost per link, I mean executing any link building type campaign, and then expecting the average cost per new link to equal some dollar amount. The status quo has been well established by paid link marketplaces, link swaps (two-way/three-way), free and paid directory submissions, and the like (none of which iAcquire has engaged in).

Click here for more Gary and Cogswell cartoons

Unfortunately that pricing precedent remains in 2012. The old way doesn’t work like it once did and content marketing, community engagement, and digital public relations reign supreme.

Enabling Bad Technique

So, why are we still judging off-page SEO based on cost per link? Considering the very vocal voice of Google, and the apparent changes going on all around why have we yet to evolve the way we measure? There seems to be this inherent need to hold on to our old notions of measurement, and that’s where the danger comes in. SEO agencies are being forced to cut corners, make bad choices, and automate things that shouldn’t be automated. The byproduct is transparent link networks, fluffed up PageRank, out-of-context linking, and spam. Heck, we allowed for some corner cutting, and we learned a valuable lesson.

5 Questions to Ask Yourself

Am I driving down the quality of my off-page efforts because of cost per link measurement?

Am I increasing the risk of organic rankings exposure?

Is my focus on link volume, PageRank, and cost per link or generating a safe ROI to the business?

Is there someone on my SEO team that is enabling bad technique?

Is my boss or my boss’s boss pushing us in the wrong direction? And if so, do I have the resources to build an internal case?

Let’s Talk about the Economics of Off-Page SEO

(because in order to avoid bad strategy you need to understand the basic economics)

On April 3rd, 2012 iAcquire released the most comprehensive study ever performed in off-page SEO (and I mean by a factor of 100). It is in every sense of the word “THE” go-to guide when it comes to expectation setting in off-page SEO delivery. The analysis included a look at all of the various link-building initiatives we deployed for all of 2011. This analysis includes article distribution and content marketing, link reclamation, even link begging. Some clients were really easy to work with – some were really hard. Bottom line – it’s a good general study that you can take to the bank.

How Much Work Can One Person Do?

When you consider the research done, the follow through, the trafficking, and the ongoing communication required in working with an account manager or project manager we find that one person can make somewhere between 20-30 new quality touches a day. Of course if you throw all that stuff out the window you can email 100 new people a day. But, the point is to get good links – not bad links. Develop good relationships – not bad relationships.

The average day consists of:

20-30 outreaches a day to new people

60-80 follow-ups to prior people

Several specific dialogues to close links

Based on the data we have, and the real world results that we see, the average person will close 1.35 new links per day or about 7 per week.

That’s it ladies and gentlemen. The myth that one person can close down 100 links a month is just not true. Some of the more proficient folks can hit 10 or more links a week without sacrificing quality, but this is going to be your top 10-20%.

Hmmm, so how does that relate to cost per link?

When you calculate a person’s salary, project management, account management, technology, content development, etc. there is no way you can deliver high quality placements for $100 per link (based on labor calculation) and, more importantly, charging or measuring on a per link basis, is not really the right approach. When analyzing cost structure you really must consider the players involved, the requirement on the strategy and account management team, and other investments like quality control and technology. A proper off-page SEO strategy is sold and delivered as a solution. A guarantee of links is just a bad idea. Let’s talk about the facts, deliver the absolute best quality, make the process transparent and monitor the bottom line.

Different strokes for Different Folks

7 links a week on average is true – except, one problem – promoting your personal injury law firm is wildly different compared to promoting your Justin Bieber ecommerce store. With that in mind it becomes very difficult to estimate the specific output of a specific person in a specific vertical. Moreover, some brands aren’t that cool; the hotter the brand, the hotter the buzz, and the more interest.

And Just in Case you Care

We vetted through about 12 million pages last year with our technology and tossed out about 11.5 million pages that didn’t meet out technical requirements. The remaining 500,000 or so pages that we kept were then reviewed and only about 100,000 were worth contacting – here’s that actual diagram.

Click here to view larger

If I shouldn’t be worried about cost per link, then what should I be worried about?

Risk Mitigation

Staying Under the Radar

My favorite analogy for risk mitigation is the example of speeding in your car. Most highways have a speed limit of 65 miles per hour. And, most of us want to get from point A to point B as fast as possible. Some of us will drive 65 miles an hour – afraid to do anything that might push the envelope or risk enforcement from big brother. Others are very comfortable in the 5-9 miles per hour over zone, i.e. 70-74 miles per hour.

Now, we all know that going 10 miles an hour over the speed limit begins increases your risk of getting pulled over – should a police officer notice you. And, then some of us flat out go 90+ miles an hour, and put ourselves at high risk (I won’t name any brands in this analogy, but you can probably think of a couple).

Folks, stay under the 10 miles an hour over the speed limit zone – I mean maybe push it to 15 over if you have to temporarily. You can still get there faster, but be reasonable.

Understanding the Game

In order to measure risk you need to understand the game. There are some great resources out there, and I’ve picked a few out that I like:

One thing that we’ve done is put the majority of our resources into content marketing. In fact, over the next 12-months about 70% of our workforce will work in content strategy, content and creative development, and digital PR and outreach.

Strategy Matters – DON’T DO THESE THINGS.

Along the lines of risk mitigation you need to avoid something very specific things as you plot out your strategy. Google has an innate ability to see the web for what it is. That’s because they graph the web by links, i.e. a link graph. Be aware of this:

Don’t Buy Links from Link Networks

Google can very easily see that certain link buyers tend to show up on the same publisher websites, i.e. 20 link buyers buy on the same 200 publisher websites, or there is an unnatural cross-over occurring. When you buy a link in these “neighborhoods” you become part of the network. It’s risky on a number of levels.

Don’t Build Links on Sites Built to Host Links

Google looks at things like, how many of the outbound links use commercially competitive keywords in the anchor text? If the ratio is too high – boom – filtered publisher, which means links that don’t pass equity, and now you’ve got a bad neighborhood linking to you.

Don’t Saturate Keyword-Rich Anchors

I love Open Site Explorer (OSE) – it’s one of the best tools out there. Oh, and congrats Rand on your recent fundraise. You deserved that more than most! OSE crawls the web, builds and analyzes the link graph and plots out the popularity of all the pages in its databases. It also lets you easily see everyone that links to any domain of your choosing.

What’s really funny is when you type in a domain, and you see that all of the inbound links say “car insurance,” especially so because then when you checkout GEICO let’s say most of the links are using branded anchor text. Google is a lot smarter than you think – keyword rich anchors are real obvious – they should be used very sparingly. If it’s so visible with a 3rd party tool like OSE imagine what Google can see and interpret.

Don’t Create Shallow Content Pages

I remember the good old days. You could just put mediocre content out there, and as long as it was even semi-original you had a good shot of ranking for mid and long-tail keywords. Now, Google just puts you into the “another shallow website” bucket. If you are going to put a page on your website it needs to rock – period.

Strategy Matters – DO THESE THINGS.

Analyze the Business Case

First thing are first – you’ve got to know how off-page SEO can impact your website(s). I would start by taking a good look at SEMRush or SearchMetrics Essentials. These tools can help you see where you rank for more popular keywords right now, and you can easily identify pages or categories that are ripe for promotion. Then just analyze those core terms that are in striking range, take a look at some exact match or broad match keyword volumes, and boom, you’ve got a case. Of course on-page SEO might be part of that case as well.

Educate the Stakeholders

I try and speak with high-level decision makers any chance I get. I find that more often than not they have a very thin understanding of how links drive domain authority. The word “domain authority” is generally totally new nomenclature. You have to bring the education process to the table if you hope to get anywhere. Once that light bulb turns on you can really start championing for financial resources. You’ve got to push the agenda though – and be aggressive about it. Not only is it vital to getting financial resources, but also vital to the longevity of your initiative.

Get Buy-Off on a Plan that Can Work, or Don’t Waste Your Time

You ever see one of those movies where there’s like this little kid, that is way too small and weak to play on the baseball team, and he sits on the bench every game, until the final game of the season when there’s a 10 to 1 lead and then finally the coach lets him walk out onto the field to play an inning. Of course the little kid gets all excited and everyone gets teary eyed, but the moral of the story is that the little kid shouldn’t be playing baseball to start with. So, yea, in a roundabout kind of way – if you can’t get the resources you need, you should shift your focus somewhere else. Don’t waste your time and be a non-hero.

If Outsourcing – Get in the Ditch, but Don’t Micro Manage

Assuming you’ve got the resources you need to get engaged in the process. Be a good process steward – learn the in’s and out’s, and be a contributor. Don’t sign the contract, cut the check, and walk away. You’ll become that “easy client” that the account manager doesn’t really have to worry about. Everyone will string it out and then one-day budget cuts will come, and you’ll be first in line. Be the client that adds value to the process, and be the marketing manager internally that takes someone else’s budget – not the other way around.

Make Sure you have Measurement Access

Outside of mitigating risk, the #1 most important job you can do is to properly measure the results of the campaign. There are 3 aspects to your measurements.

Rankings

Over the last few years I’ve developed a bit of a pet peeve. If you launch an SEO campaign without a proper baseline of your current rankings for your top-level, secondary, and an intelligent sampling of your tertiary keywords you are making a big mistake. Our account team knows this and we do a damn good job of making sure we run great baseline reports. This pet peeve developed over more than 10-years of watching campaigns, and seeing what happens when someone fails to do this. It’s a catastrophic loss of credit, and let’s be honest – taking credit is a necessity. You can’t go back in time and see what your rankings were after the fact! There are a few tools that can do this, but not very well.

Organic Traffic

Ah, traffic, my favorite friend. Traffic drives branding, loyalty, sales, leads, actions, everything. Sometimes even relevant traffic doesn’t directly contribute to a desirable action, but it still has value – lots of it. Make sure you are measuring the organic traffic to your entire website, as well as any specific categories or key pages you are targeting. The next step is to analyze specific keywords and keyword groups. But don’t just look at specific keywords. Off-Page SEO improves domain authority, and domain authority influences perception and trustworthiness by search engines – it is very likely that the entire site will see a lift. A popular quote, “rising tides lifts all boats.”

Organic Actions (Conversion Goals)

Okay, this is where the rubber meets the road. If you can see that organic sales are improving you’re looking good. If organic sales are way up, you are way good. Sales, leads, actions – these things might all have value, and may be measured in different ways. Make sure you understand these value points and KPI’s. Sometimes SEO initiatives are complex and include many factors like multiple vendors, on-page initiatives, off-page initiatives, and content addition initiatives. You might need some help singling out how off-page by itself is making an impact, and sometimes it can be challenging.

To Summarize

Bad strategy, and the notion to maintain the status quo has become a vehicle for failure. It’s not about cost per link. It’s about relationship building, digital asset distribution, and risk mitigation, coupled with well-planned strategy, and proper results measurement. These things require skill, time, and experience. Build something great in house, or hire a fully transparent off-page SEO agency that understands 2012 strategy – then manage the process. Cost per link is dead.